info:eu-repo/semantics/article
New basal synapsid discovery at the Permian outcrop of Torre del Porticciolo (Alghero, Italy)
Fecha
2019-05Registro en:
Romano, Marco; Citton, Paolo; Maganuco, Simone; Sacchi, Eva; Caratelli, Martina; et al.; New basal synapsid discovery at the Permian outcrop of Torre del Porticciolo (Alghero, Italy); John Wiley & Sons Ltd; Geological Journal (Chichester); 54; 3; 5-2019; 1554-1566
0072-1050
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Romano, Marco
Citton, Paolo
Maganuco, Simone
Sacchi, Eva
Caratelli, Martina
Ronchi, Ausonio
Nicosia, Umberto
Resumen
The Torre del Porticciolo fossil locality is notable for producing the first osteological material of a basal (i.e., non-mammalian) synapsid in Italy, the giant herbivore Alierasaurus ronchii, which although known from fragmentary remains, likely represents the largest known late early to early middle Permian synapsid (6–7 m total length). Recently, a new productive site was discovered about 100 m from the Alierasaurus type locality, but roughly at the same stratigraphic level. The fragmentary nature of most of the recovered bones prompted a taphonomical analysis in order to define the type of find, the kind of burial, and the mode of preservation. The vertebrate remains allowed us to infer a complex taphonomical process involving a multiphase entombment. The recovered bones were subjected to both re-exhumation and reworking. The last short and violent transportation phase before final entombment occurred as a high-energy flow, probably caused by a river flood that carried sediment and bones together to be emplaced in a semi-perennial pond in a crevasse splay deposit. Preliminary analysis of recovered material indicates the presence of a large carnivorous basal synapsid referable to the family Sphenacodontidae. This discovery represents the first carnivorous non-therapsid synapsid from the Permian of Italy and one of only very few known from Europe.